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#11
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#12
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In message , BUFDRVR
writes Neil Gerace wrote: I dunno; that plane flying KAL007 that day needed two SAMs to down it. Those weren't *SAMs*, they were Air-to-air missiles and generally much, much smaller. Anyone know which missile type brought down KAL007? Atoll? Anabs, since it was a Su-15. -- He thinks too much: such men are dangerous. Julius Caesar I:2 Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
#13
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![]() Su-15 is armed with 2 AA-3 Anab missiles and 2 AA-8 Aphid. AA-3 was used. It's a very large weapon, dedicated bomber killer. And the pilots were typically hard-nosed, dedicated airmen. The Flagon pilots pressed hard against us - they were not intimidated in the least in these open ocean contests. I have a pretty clear memory (and the photos help) of an Su 15 coming in about 30 degrees off our nose with about 600 mph closure. His wake turbulance felt like that earthquake that we had here last week. Our mission put us in front of various Soviet aircraft - Tu-16s, 95s, Su-15s, Be-8, An-38, MiG-23, Mi-8, Mi-24, etc. - along the Kurilski Ostrovka. The Su-15s were up by Petro and on Ostrov Sakhalin; the MiG-23s were on the smaller islands, Mi-24s from Frontal Aviation and Border Troops; all of them came out from the mainland to show their displeasure at our continued existance. When the Sakhalin-based Sukhoi showed up and made high speed passes around us, I felt like we truly were in mortal danger, that the probability of a shootdown had switched from "possible" to "imminent". Shove the raft bag toward the door, call the position of the jet as it swings behind us so the pilots can manuever sideways away from the Sukhoi's approach. Still two Hinds above us - the pilots and I were working together to keep all three in sight and NOT directly behind us; one of the most interesting half hours of my career. LT Arvonen was a natural in that environment. Hopefully, he is out of the Navy and having fun by now. Sukhois out of Sakhalin? Don't mess with them. Old or not, they were all business. v/r Gordon ====(A+C==== USN SAR Its always better to lose -an- engine, not -the- engine. |
#14
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![]() "BUFDRVR" wrote in message ... Neil Gerace wrote: I dunno; that plane flying KAL007 that day needed two SAMs to down it. Those weren't *SAMs*, they were Air-to-air missiles and generally much, much smaller. Anyone know which missile type brought down KAL007? Atoll? Of course you're right, heh. But nevertheless, there were two of them. One wasn't enough. |
#15
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"Neil Gerace" wrote in message ...
Of course you're right, heh. But nevertheless, there were two of them. One wasn't enough. Not necessarily (although I don't have enough details to be certain). If I recall correctly, standard doctrine was to fire both an IR and a radar missile at any given target, to insure at least on hit. The communications transcript I have shows the pilot firing both missiles at the same time. Whether this was due to the mentioned doctrine, or to a hunch/calculations that a single missile would be insufficient, I don't know. Rob |
#16
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![]() "Rob van Riel" wrote in message om... Not necessarily (although I don't have enough details to be certain). If I recall correctly, standard doctrine was to fire both an IR and a radar missile at any given target, to insure at least on hit. The communications transcript I have shows the pilot firing both missiles at the same time. Whether this was due to the mentioned doctrine, or to a hunch/calculations that a single missile would be insufficient, I don't know. IIRC the plane wasn't disabled until the second one hit. |
#17
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![]() "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... "Eunometic" wrote in message om... What seems to give the B52 a great deal of protection is that it can fly so very high. Only the largest of SAMS can reach that height. IE SA6/Hawke missiles are not up to it. It needs a S300/S400 class missile. Eh? I-hawk has a ceiling of some 58K feet--do you really see the BUFF operating higher than that? Brooks No, but you could see a Victor or a Vulcan - apparently they could cruise at 65k feet, or the EU could get Concorde at the same altitude - if they got them back from museums! David |
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